Goals for This Second Lesson
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
- Express independence as
- Show this is equivalent to the product rule
- Build a two-way table from base rates
- Distinguish
from in context
A 95% Test, a Positive Result
A rare disease. A test that is 95% accurate. Your result: positive.
- How likely is it you actually have the disease?
- Most people guess "about 95%"
Make your guess and hold it. The real answer will surprise you.
Independence Means Conditioning Changes Nothing
Two events are independent exactly when:
- Learning
happened tells you nothing new about - If
, the events are dependent
This is the most intuitive form of independence: no change.
Verify Independence on a Die
Equal — so the events are independent.
Two Definitions That Say One Thing
The conditional form and the product rule are equivalent:
- Conditional form gives the meaning ("no change")
- Product rule gives a quick test
Multiply both sides of the conditional form by
Quick Check on Independent Events
What is
Answer:
Direction Is What Makes Testing Tricky
The trap hides in the direction of conditioning:
- Accuracy is
— among the sick - You want
— among the positives
Different directions — and when disease is rare, they differ a lot.
Set Up a Group of 10,000
Imagine 10,000 people; the disease affects 1%.
- 100 people are sick
- 9,900 people are healthy
Few sick, many healthy — this base rate is the key to the puzzle.
Apply the Test to Both Groups
- Sick:
test positive (95% of 100) - Healthy:
test positive (3% of 9,900) - Total positive:
The Surprising Answer: About 24%
- A positive test means only a 24% chance of disease
- Not 95% — most positives are false alarms
The test is accurate, yet a positive usually isn't disease.
Why Only 24% From a 95% Test?
The test is 95% accurate — yet a positive means only 24% disease.
In your own words, why? Commit before advancing.
Because the disease is rare, false positives from the huge healthy group outnumber the true positives.
The Two Directions Are Not Equal
- Confusing them is base-rate neglect (the prosecutor's fallacy)
- High
shows association, not causation
Umbrellas and rain go together — neither causes the other.
A Factory Quality Control Example
Machine A: 60% of products, 2% defective. Machine B: 40%, 5% defective.
More products, yet less often the defect source.
Your Turn: The Spam Filter
5% of emails are spam. Filter flags spam 90%, flags good email 2%.
- An email is flagged. Find
- Use 10,000 emails — build the table, then compute
Work it fully yourself before the reveal.
Watch Out: Two Reasoning Errors
Reversed conditioning:
Association is not causation: a high
Ask: which direction, and pattern or mechanism?
Key Takeaways and What's Next
✓ Independent ⟺
✓ Build a base-rate table to find a reversed conditional
✓ A 95% test can mean only 24% when disease is rare
Watch the conditioning direction; association isn't causation
Next: everyday-language reasoning, then two-way frequency tables.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Understand conditional probability